Course 2022-2023

Intellectual Property Rights [DROIB316]

  • 3 credits
  • 30h
  • 2nd quarter
Language of instruction: French / Français

Learning outcomes

Specific competences

    - Explain the purpose and the consequences of the rules and mechanisms that organise the main intellectual property regimes.
    - Identify correctly the questions which arise in concrete situations concerning intellectual property rights, and propose the most appropriate solutions by making optimal use of the applicable rules.
    - Understand the legislative and jurisprudential evolutions, as well as the societal stakes in a context where intellectual rights are confronted with significant technological evolutions and competition with other fundamental rights.

Cross-cutting skills

    - Conduct a rigorous and reasoned analysis of jurisprudential solutions, adding a personal and critical viewpoint.
    - Demonstrate a sense of synthesis, precision and discernment.
    - Build a structured, supported and convincing argument.
    - Project yourself into concrete situations, devise judicious examples, identify the advantages and disadvantages of different solutions.

 

Objectives

- The course aims to enable the student to understand the legal and jurisprudential mechanisms that organise intellectual property.
- It invites the student to discuss the subject in a reasoned and critical manner.
- It helps the student to project him/herself into concrete situations which require a rigorous and creative application of the theoretical rules.
- It offers the student a global reflection on the evolution of the subject and on the margin of progress offered to it with regard to technological and societal challenges.

 

Content

There are many intellectual property rights and they are becoming increasingly complex. The course cannot cover all intellectual property rights or the details of each protection. A brief general introduction explains the nature of intellectual property rights, the different objects that can be protected by them and some principles common to all.
The bulk of the course focuses on two major intellectual property rights, or even three if circumstances permit: copyright, trademark and, where applicable, patent law. For each of these rights, the aim is to understand, in particular, the general logic of protection, the object of protection, access and the scope of protection. It includes eminently practical aspects in this respect. The rights discussed are placed in a global context in order to illustrate their confrontation with other fundamental rights, and in some cases with the general interest.
Current debates on intellectual property are also discussed in order to reveal the economic and social issues involved. These include issues relating to health-related patents, the complexity of copyright in the digital environment and a reasoned approach to trademark law.
Students are invited to discuss in an argumentative way the most relevant issues in this field, and to position themselves in relation to certain legal proposals. The teacher takes care to provide a maximum of examples which implement the mechanisms exposed in order to allow the students to project themselves in concrete situations and to proceed to a rigorous and even creative application of the theoretical rules.
In general, the course focuses on both a national and a supranational perspective. The analysis covers Belgian law, Benelux law, European Union law and international treaty law. Special attention is paid to the case law of the Court of Justice of the European Union.


 

Table of contents

A detailed table of contents will be available on Webcampus.
Subject to change, the guidelines are as follows:

1.     COURSE 1
General introduction: purpose of the course, the variety of intellectual property rights, economic issues, societal issues, presentation of the legal framework, impact of EU law, working method (participatory model, work plan, timetable), sources and materials, evaluation method, information on monitoring and on-call.
2.    COURSE 2
Copyright, concept of work, conditions of protection; practical cases and exercises.
3.    COURSE 3
Copyright, scope of rights, economic rights; practical cases and exercises.
4.    COURSE 4
Copyright, scope of rights, the case of plagiarism and parody; case studies and exercises.
5.    COURSE 5
Copyright, scope of rights, exceptions; case studies and exercises.
6.    COURSE 6
Copyright: moral rights; contracts; ownership; duration; rights related to copyright; case studies and exercises.
7.    COURSE
Trademark law: concept of trademark, types of trademark, conditions of protection, procedure for obtaining a trademark; practical cases and exercises.  
8.    COURSE 8
Trademark law: scope of protection; practical cases and exercises.
9.    COURSE 9
Trade mark law: scope of protection (continued); exceptions; case studies and exercises.
10.    COURSE 10
Trade mark law: obligation of use; degeneration; case studies and exercises.
11.    COURSE 11
Comparison of copyright and trademark law; the place of the public interest; relationship between intellectual property law and unfair competition law; practical cases and exercises.
12.    COURSE 12 and 13
Conclusions. Questions and answers. Presentation of the exam.

Exercises description

Two or three (maximum) exercise sessions are organised during the second semester. In these sessions, the main focus is on solving practical cases. Each session has two parts.
The first part is intended to remind and deepen the mechanisms exposed during the lecture or the participative course, and to ensure, through a question and answer exchange, that the student has correctly integrated them. To do this, support material (in the form of tables or diagrams will be made available on Webcampus after the sessions).
The second part is intended for the resolution of case studies based on the concrete examples and problems discussed during the course, or on current events.
Unless modified, the following system will be used. An exercise sheet will be put online on Webcampus. The student will then be invited to solve the exercises and submit his/her answers through the "homework" tool on Webcampus, in the section indicated before the session.
In addition to the weekly tutorials, students have the possibility to submit - anonymously - questions concerning subject areas for which they need explanations or clarifications to be dealt with during the practical sessions. Finally, they can ask specific questions or get feedback on their resolutions.

 


Teaching methods

- The lessons are given in the form of a lecture, with the integration of devices promoting interactivity, in principle in the classroom and by default in the classroom.
- The teacher provides numerous examples that concretely implement the mechanisms presented. The teacher provides students with problems that lend themselves to discussion.
- As far as possible, a significant part of the lessons will be designed according to a model requiring student participation. Practical details will be communicated to students in the first lessons and via webcampus.
- Each lesson is devoted to a distinct theme (see above, the themes).
- The teacher analyses and comments on judicial decisions, with the participation of the students. Students are invited to prepare the material and the judicial decisions to be discussed in the course, in order to take part in the debates.
- The teaching may use the flipped classroom process to integrate one or more parts of the material.
- Two or three (maximum) exercise sessions are devoted to solving practical cases in class or remotely (see below).
- If circumstances permit, at the end of the teaching period, a training module is offered to students to prepare them for the assessment and the questions that may be submitted to them during the examination.

 

Evaluations

Subject to modification, the evaluation will in principle take the following form: an oral examination, either face-to-face or distance learning, plus a written part, either face-to-face or distance learning, devoted to the resolution of a practical case.
- The assessment takes place in June and/or August-September. If necessary, the written part takes place outside the session.
- The oral examination will last 10 to 15 minutes.
- The evaluation also takes into account the students' participation during the term.
- The content of the examination is designed to check whether the student has integrated the learning outcomes. In particular, the questions are designed to assess respectively
i.    i. Accuracy in rendering and legal justification (reference to law and case law).
ii.    Discernment
iii.    A sense of synthesis
iv.    Quality and articulation of reasoning
v.    Ability to put into practice and situation
- At the examination, the student will bring his or her codes and, if necessary, other documents that will be indicated by the teachers. The texts may not be annotated, except for article-to-article references. No other documents are allowed.

- The final mark is not purely arithmetical and depends on the teachers' overall assessment of the performance, who may give particular attention to a serious error, a significant deficiency or any other substantial deficiency.

 

Recommended readings

- Slides
- Detailed outline with course structure
- Case law references
- References of doctrine
- BAC Code + Economic Law Code
- Exercise sheets + explanatory diagrams and tables available on Webcampus
- Other documents available on Webcampus

 

Language of instruction

French / Français

Location for course

NAMUR

Organizer

Faculté de droit
Rue de Bruxelles, 61
5000 NAMUR

Degree of Reference

Undergraduate Degree